Nadal becomes seventh man in tennis history with at least one title from each Grand Slam tournament

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Rafael Nadal of Spain reacts after beating Novak Djokovic of Serbia to win the men's championship match at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York, Monday, Sept. 13, 2010.

Updated at 9:41 PM CST on Monday, Sep 13, 2010

Rafael Nadal won his first U.S. Open title to complete a career Grand Slam, beating Novak Djokovic 6-4, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 Monday in a match filled with fantastic shotmaking by both men and interrupted by a thunderstorm a day after it was postponed by rain.

It's Nadal's third consecutive major championship and ninth overall.

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He is the seventh man in tennis history with at least one title from each Grand Slam tournament.

Rain pushed the men's final at the U.S. Open from Sunday to Monday for the third consecutive year, and play was interrupted for nearly two hours during the second set. When they resumed, Djokovic took that set, the only one Nadal lost in the tournament.

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But the No. 1-ranked Spaniard quickly took a lead in the third set and never let it go. Viewed for quite some time as Roger Federer's nemesis, Nadal now has made his own greatness quite clear.

He stretched his Grand Slam winning streak to 21 matches by adding the U.S. Open to his titles at the French Open in June, then Wimbledon in July. No man had won those three tournaments in the same year since Rod Laver won a true Grand Slam in 1969. Now Nadal heads to the Australian Open in January with a chance to claim a "Rafa Slam" of four consecutive major championships — something that also hasn't been done since Laver.

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No. 3 Djokovic, the 2008 Australian Open champion, made Nadal earn it. The Serb played superbly for long stretches, showing off the terrific returning, retrieving and big forehand he used to knock off 16-time Grand Slam champion Federer in Saturday's semifinals.

Coming out of the rain delay with Djokovic serving at 4-4, 30-30 in the second set, both players clearly benefited from a bit of rest. Fresh of body and clear of mind, and with conditions perfect for tennis — calm and cool, the temperature in the 70s — they were superb, engaging in 10-, 15-, 20-stroke points that drew standing ovations and camera flashes from the stands, no matter who hit the winner.

And there were winners aplenty at both ends, as well as point-extending defense, shoes squeaking as they scurried around the court.

Djokovic claimed the second set by breaking Nadal in the final game, getting back a deep return off a 122 mph serve. Nadal was on his heels — a rare sight, indeed — and slapped a forehand into the net. That gave Djokovic three breaks in a span of 10 service games, against a player who was broken twice the first 92 times he served.

It would be the only set lost of 22 played by Nadal in New York this year, as he came oh-so-close to being the first man in a half-century to win this tournament without dropping a set.

Nadal was back to his relentless best in the third and fourth, hitting shots so well that Djokovic was moved to applaud on occasion. Nadal broke for 2-1 leads in each of those last two sets, and got to match point by sprinting to reach a drop shot and whipping a forehand that landed right on the baseline.

Djokovic hit a forehand wide to end it, and Nadal fell backward onto the court with a shout. He rolled onto his stomach, his chest heaving — finally the champion in New York after losing in the semifinals the last two years.

Now he's the first left-hander to win the U.S. Open since John McEnroe in 1984, and the first Spaniard since Manuel Orantes in 1975.